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  1. Oscar Wilde is a 1936 play written by Leslie and Sewell Stokes. It is based on the life of the Irish playwright Oscar Wilde in which Wilde's friend, the controversial author and journalist Frank Harris, appears as a character.

    • Salome (Play)

      Salome (French: Salomé, pronounced [salɔme]) is a one-act...

    • English

      After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he...

  2. Salome (French: Salomé, pronounced [salɔme]) is a one-act tragedy by Oscar Wilde. The original version of the play was first published in French in 1893; an English translation was published a year later. The play depicts the attempted seduction of Jokanaan (John the Baptist) by Salome, stepdaughter of Herod Antipas; her dance of the seven ...

    • Oscar Wilde
    • 1894
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Oscar_WildeOscar Wilde - Wikipedia

    After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular playwrights in London in the early 1890s. He is best remembered for his epigrams and plays, his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, and his criminal conviction for gross indecency for homosexual acts.

    • A Florentine Tragedy » A story of a wealthy merchant who, finding his wife in the arms of a local prince, strangles his rival. (7 pages)
    • A Woman of No Importance » Satiric play about hypocrisy and double standards of the Victorian upper classes. Wilde's take on dark comedy. (39 pages)
    • An Ideal Husband » Witty social satire filled with poignant humor as well as romance, intrigue, and scandal. Criticism of Victorian society. (54 pages)
    • La Sainte Courtisane » A play portraying Myrrhina, beautiful and wealthy noblewoman, and a Christian hermit, Honorius. (4 pages)
  4. Oscar Wilde’s one-act play Salomé (published 1893; first performed 1896) was translated by Hedwig Lachmann as the libretto for Richard Strauss’s one-act opera of the same name (first produced 1905), in which Herod is portrayed as lusting after Salome, while Salome, in her turn, desires John the Baptist; she….

  5. 3 days ago · Oscar Wilde (born October 16, 1854, Dublin, Ireland—died November 30, 1900, Paris, France) was an Irish wit, poet, and dramatist whose enduring fame rests on his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), and on his comic masterpieces Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895).

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  7. Oscar Wildes lyrical one-act drama – originally banned in Britain – reinvented Salomé as a powerful and enigmatic figure, both erotic and chaste.

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